Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2003 16:33:53 -0700 From: Sean Chittenden <sean@chittenden.org> To: "D. J. Bernstein" <djb@cr.yp.to> Cc: freebsd-performance@freebsd.org Subject: Re: ten thousand small processes Message-ID: <20030630233353.GG96753@perrin.int.nxad.com> In-Reply-To: <20030626212659.51367.qmail@cr.yp.to> References: <20030626025029.71392.qmail@cr.yp.to> <200306260515.h5Q5FhPF020045@bitblocks.com> <20030626212659.51367.qmail@cr.yp.to>
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> > Instead of complaining about wasting 78 megabytes and arguing > > about why various proposed solutions fall short and why your way > > is the best, why don't you come up with a patch that saves space > > for small programs? > > Funny. Seems to me that I keep making concrete > suggestions---including a detailed proposal for giving more space to > malloc()---and the answer is consistently ``We really don't care > about per-process overhead.'' What's the benefit of a patch for > people who don't even see the problem? It'd be slick if malloc(3) had a mallopt(3) call that'd make it easier to monkey with the _malloc_options, but, until such time as phk is on this list or decides to add such an interface, why not just set: _malloc_options = "<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<"; /* '<' * 15 */ to reduce the malloc cache to 0? From malloc(3): TUNING Once, when the first call is made to one of these memory allocation rou- tines, various flags will be set or reset, which affect the workings of this allocation implementation. The ``name'' of the file referenced by the symbolic link named /etc/malloc.conf, the value of the environment variable MALLOC_OPTIONS, and the string pointed to by the global variable _malloc_options will be interpreted, in that order, character by character as flags. Most flags are single letters, where uppercase indicates that the behav- ior is set, or on, and lowercase means that the behavior is not set, or off. [snip] < Reduce the size of the cache by a factor of two. The default cache size is 16 pages. This option can be specified multiple times. -sc -- Sean Chittenden
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